Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Овај сајт ће имати ограничену функционалност док га будемо ажурирали у циљу побољшања вашег искуства. Ако неки чланак не реши ваш проблем и желите да поставите питање, на располагању ће вам бити наше заједнице подршке @FirefoxSupport на Twitter-у и /r/firefox на Reddit-у.

Претражи подршку

Избегните преваре подршке. Никада од вас нећемо тражити да зовете или шаљете поруке на број или да делите личне податке. Пријавите сумњиве радње преко „Пријавите злоупотребу” опције.

Сазнај више

I logged in to a site a long time ago and has proven to be valid website. However, this warning icon keeps popping up every time. I don't know how to get rid of it.

  • 1 одговор
  • 2 имају овај проблем
  • 1 преглед
  • Последњи одговор послао cor-el

more options

ncoes.ellc.elearn.army.mil: 433 uses an invalid security certificate.

The certificate is not trusted because is not trusted.

(Error code: sec_error_untrusted_issuer)

This could be a problem with the server's cofiguration or it could be someone trying to impersonate the server. If you have connected to this server successfully in the past the error may be temporary and you can try again later.

ncoes.ellc.elearn.army.mil: 433 uses an invalid security certificate. The certificate is not trusted because is not trusted. (Error code: sec_error_untrusted_issuer) This could be a problem with the server's cofiguration or it could be someone trying to impersonate the server. If you have connected to this server successfully in the past the error may be temporary and you can try again later.

Сви одговори (1)

more options

Which certificate(s) did you remove?

Do you still have all DoD root and intermediate certificates installed needed to access that server?

Don't know which are needed (typo in the above posted URL?), but you can retrieve that certificate and check the issuer (e.g. DOD CA-21 and DoD Root CA 2).